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Happy game day fellas
Happy Game Day everyone
Somebody needs to notify the cavs that there is a game today, in case they forgot.
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Happy game day fellas
Happy Game Day everyone
I know what it means I just think it sounds for silly and cliche.
Fixed/fact
If he can't acknowledge that he needs to reach another level then he's dumb!
I know what it means I just think it sounds for silly and cliche.
Na he definitely shouldn't say thatWord. Phil should've said "just quit & get swept". A lil less cliche.I know what it means I just think it sounds for silly and cliche.
Na he definitely shouldn't say that . Like I said i get want me meant by the possessed thing I'm just saying its cliche like many of the things we say in sports to describe scenarios.
Sounds like they've been reading nt for the past decadeWatching ESPN, disgusting.
Narrative:
"Message to the Cavs, LeBron needs helps"
Bu-But Lue said he finally got helpWatching ESPN, disgusting.
Narrative:
"Message to the Cavs, LeBron needs helps"
The union that represents NBA referees asked the league on Tuesday to stop issuing public reports that clarify whether or not officials make the correct calls during key moments of games.
The National Basketball Referees Association argued that the NBA’s Last Two Minute report promotes “so-called transparency” that causes “more harm than good for the officials and the game.” The union suggested going back to a private, league-managed evaluation, saying that it’d even back the idea of discipline for officials in cases of egregious missed calls.
Among the group’s key arguments: “Transparency does nothing to change the outcome of the game,” and “transparency encourages anger and hostility towards NBA officials.”
The NBA began issuing the public reports—which marks every potential infraction as either a correct call, correct no-call, incorrect call or an incorrect no-call during the final two minutes of a game within five points—in March 2015.
The report drew widespread attention and criticism last month, when the league acknowledged officials missing five calls in the final 13.5 seconds of a playoff game between the Oklahoma City Thunder and the San Antonio Spurs.